Places

5 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Maps

75 maps found.

1898-1901, Cotton End Ref. RNC678650
1907-1908, Cotton Of Gardyne Ref. RNC678664
1902, Upper Cotton Ref. RNC857186
1919, Cotton End Ref. POP678649
1946, Cotton End Ref. NPO678650
1880 - 1898, Cotton Ref. HOSM41996
1884, Cotton End Ref. HOSM41192
1907-1908, Cotton Of Brighty Ref. RNC678662
1903-1904, Cotton Tree Ref. RNC678671
1882, Cotton End Ref. HOSM41999
1883 - 1884, Far Cotton Ref. HOSM45124
1883 - 1884, Cotton End Ref. HOSM42976
1897, Stamford Bridge Ref. HOSM41998
1888 - 1903, Newton Poppleford Ref. HOSM43416
1886 - 1902, Hill Top Ref. HOSM70196

Books

Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.

Memories

177 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.

Memories Of Covenham As A Child

I was born in Covenham in Zeplin Row in 1950. I remember going to bed with candles as that was the only form of lighting we had. If it was cold in the winter I can remember my mum wraping up the warm oven ...Read more

A memory of Covenham St Mary in 1950 by Yvonne Lilley

Broad Street School

I too, went to the Nursery School on Broad Street. I remember Miss Massey who slammed the desk down on my fingers squashing my signet ring, which resulted in my finger swelling and the ring having to be cut off! Such a nice lady ...Read more

A memory of Crewe in 1956 by Lynn Bryan

My Oldham

I was born in Oldham in 1946. Lived in Norfolk Street, Chadderton until 1953 then moved to the Isle of Wight. My mother, Marjorie Bolton, lived in Hollinwood and represented Oldham as Cotton Queen in the 1930's. Have always loved the ...Read more

A memory of Oldham in 1946 by Margaret Lorraine Toms Nee Mangnall

Wannock Avenue

My grandad, Joseph Woodgate, was the builder that built a lot of early Wannock Avenue's houses and bungalows. He built Wee Cott - one the first houses to be built which had a very large monkey puzzle tree in the garden, until the ...Read more

A memory of Willingdon by Philip Baldock

1960's

I lived at 117a Mitcham Road, above Coombes the Bakers, next door was David Greggs and Soloman's Greengrocers. Other shops on on the road were Smith Bros (either end of the block), David Kaye Butchers, Dewhurst Buthchers, Boots and a Gent's ...Read more

A memory of Tooting by Ray Pryor

The Ghost On Station Road

I lived at 59 Station Road, Royston. My parents moved there in the very early 1960's and I was born in 1969 and my brother David in 1972. It was a semi, with what seemed to be a garden that went on forever. I ...Read more

A memory of Royston by hbvrl

1940's Wortley

The photograph shows the entry to Hell Mill Lane (sometimes called Riley Road) which runs along the valley of the Little Avon towards Ozleworth; to the right behind the trees is Wortley Farm, occupied in the 1940's by ...Read more

A memory of Wortley by rontavender

Life In Rock Street Aberkenfig

I was born in 1943 and lived at Ely Cottage, Rock Street. The house was built by my Grandfather around 1920, I have a page from a 1926 telephone directory stating that the house was a business address of the Adams ...Read more

A memory of Aberkenfig by wiclad

Bennett&Sayers Nuns Street Derby

I served my apprenticeship at Bennett&Sayers from 1964 to 1972, the scrap yard opposite was always called Frank Radfords, further up Nuns street [over the bridge] this was the original Samways for the highways,[now ...Read more

A memory of Derby by geoff.barker

The Canal

Hi,my name is Stephen Smith, I lived in Regent Crescent through the 50s and 60s. I guess you all remember the Rochdale canal that runs through Failsworth. What a great place to spend your time. Who needed Disneyland. We used to fish, make ...Read more

A memory of Failsworth by steve_gunsmith

Captions

124 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.

Caption For Preston, The Bridge Over The Ribble 1903

Preston was a major cotton town, and the Lancaster Canal runs from Ashton Basin.

Caption For Wilmslow, Grove Street 1897

Like Macclesfield and many other small towns around, Wilmslow was to develop enormously in the 18th century with the introduction of industries linked to local silk and cotton mills.

Caption For Belper, Long Row C1955

The houses on the right of the street date from about this time, and were provided by Strutt for his workers at the nearby cotton mills, powered by the River Derwent.

Caption For Grappenhall, The Canal C1955

In this area the canal was used for the transportation of fustian, a form of rough cotton known as 'poor man's velvet' that was produced locally.

Caption For Caton, The Village C1960

At the time of the Industrial Revolution there were cotton and bobbin mills here providing work for hundreds of operatives.

Caption For Madingley, The Church C1955

When the Cotton family commissioned Capability Brown to design a park in 1756, he cut a swathe through the village, separating the church and a couple of farms and cottages from the rest of the village

Caption For Clitheroe, Low Moor Mill From Edisford Bridge 1921

The view looks upstream to Low Moor Mill, which produced cotton cloth until it closed in the 1950s.

Caption For Caton, The Druids' Oak C1955

Agriculture dominated the village until the end of the 17th century, when Arkle Beck was harnessed for cotton mills.

Caption For Harden, Goit Stock Falls 1923

Harden Beck, which used to power a cotton-spinning mill up to 1802, is pictured here just below Hallas Bridge.

Caption For Yoxford, Jubilee Seat C1955

It was planted on 11 November 1923 by Ezra Cotton and George Davy, the oldest and youngest children at the school, to commemorate the great battles of 1916.

Caption For Roberttown, The Cross Roads C1965

Mills processed cotton and wool, providing clothing and fancy goods for the millions of workers who poured into West Yorkshire in the 19th century.

Caption For Ripponden, Oldham Road 1966

Cotton spinning brought rich rewards to the town.

Caption For Preston, The Parish Church 1893

Born near Bolton in 1768, he established Preston's first cotton mill, known as the Yellow Factory, and founded a textile business that grew to be one of the biggest in the world.

Caption For Warrington, St Mary's Catholic Church Interior 1895

St Mary's Church was built between 1875-77 on the site of a former cotton factory in Buttermarket Street, close to the working-class districts which provided its congregation.

Caption For Blackburn, Exchange 1899

It was known later as the Cotton Exchange.The building, at least the front, is still there today, and is a cinema.

Caption For Knutsford, Royal George Hotel, King Street C1955

In this area the canal was used for the transportation of fustian, a form of rough cotton known as 'poor man's velvet' that was produced locally.

Caption For Yoxford, The Church 1909

It is for Ezra Cotton (d1898) and his widow Lucy (d1908).

Caption For Southport, Cambridge Hall, Art Gallery, Library And Bank 1887

It was thanks to the generosity of cotton manufacturer William Atkinson that Southport got a Free Library and Art Gallery; he paid for both of them.

Caption For Rochdale, One Ash 1898

John Bright`s father Jacob built a cotton mill at Greenbank in 1809 and John became a partner when he was aged 16.

Caption For Marlborough, The College, The Bradleian Building 1901

He followed Dr Cotton in increasing the size of Marlborough from a modest establishment, providing good cut-price education to the son of clergymen, to one of the great public schools of the

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Caption For Gatehouse Of Fleet, High Street C1955

It grew into a centre for brewing, cotton manufacturing, boat building and tanning, and was once known as 'the Glasgow of the South'.

Caption For Madingley, The Hall 1909

The hall was later remodelled as a mansion house for the Hynde and Cotton families.

Caption For Leigh, Market Street C1950

Leigh was a market town that prospered on coal, cotton, and silk.

Caption For Runcorn, Weston Point C1955

Alkali was needed not only for the production of soap but also to finish textiles in the nearby Lancashire cotton mills.